QUEST Community Science Blog Author: Shuka Kalantari

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Shuka Kalantari is a freelance writer and a health and medicine journalism student at CUNY Graduate School of Journalism in New York City. She has written for San Francisco Downtown Magazine, Common Ground Magazine, and Time Inc.’s health website, Health.com. Shuka is currently working for KPFA Radio's: Voices of the Middle East and North Africa in Berkeley, and an intern for KQED's QUEST in San Francisco.


Website: http://shukakalantari.com


All Posts by Shuka:

    Hiking Through Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve

    July 25th, 2008 by Shuka Kalantari

    Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve

    Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve can easily be missed: just off Highway 280 in the city of Woodside, the entrance is blocked by a rusted metal gate with a small sign that reads ‘No Tresspassing, Area Patrolled.’

    But some of the folks at QUEST - including yours truly - got a special tour of the preserve. I joined reporter David Gorn and biologist Scott Loarie on a three hour hike around Jasper Ridge’s Searsville Lake.

    I learned that plant-life on the preserve, and most endemic California plant-life, are in trouble.

    At least, that’s what Loarie and his team at Stanford predict. “If plants can’t adapt to the climate changes,” says Loarie, “Then by the end of the century two-thirds of California plants face an 80 percent reduction.”

    So which plants are most likely to go as the global climate changes, well, the plants that have a hard time with seed dispersion. Plants like Bay Laurel, the California Buckeye, Madrone and the Western Burning Bush have seeds that aren’t easily dispersed. This gives them a very concentrated zone for growth. If the climate shifts slightly in that particular region, then the these California natives could all die out.

    Bay Laurel

    The plants that do have an easier time are those with a wide seed dispersion - like the beautiful but dangerous Poison Oak, the Coyote Bush, Clarkia, Virgin’s Bower and Box Elder Maple. These plants all have small seeds that are easily dispersed by the wind, or by birds. By dispersing their seeds to various climates, these plants will have a better chance of surviving.

    Virgin’s Bower

    So which California plants will survive a century from now? It’s hard to say. But what is definite is that preserves like Jasper Ridge are crucial for monitoring and protecting California’s unique plant life.


    View a slideshow of the“Disappearing Plants” Radio Report online, as well as find additional links and resources.


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    Quest Picks: Talking Elephants at the Oakland Zoo

    July 11th, 2008 by Shuka Kalantari

    Can elephants feel seismic waves?

    Scientists have known for years that elephants can communicate. By using low frequency vocals, called rumbles, elephants can ‘talk’ with eachother, sometimes communicating from very long distances.

    But the new question being asked by some scientists is: can elephants feel those rumbles in the earth?

    Biologist Dr. Caitlin O’Connell-Rodwell from the Oakland Zoo wants to find out. After studying elephant activity in Africa, she noticed that elephants would raise and lower their feet when interacting with one another. She realized that these elephants were using seismic waves felt through their feet to send messages.

    O’Connell-Rodwell and her team have been creating mini-earthquakes for an elephant (named Donna) at the Oakland Zoo to monitor her responses to different seismic activities.

    Check out this National Geographic video about the study on YouTube:


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    Plastic not Fantastic

    June 23rd, 2008 by Shuka Kalantari

    Humans produce 500 billion plastic bags annually.

    In China, they recently banned it. Australia, Bangladesh, Ireland, Italy, South Africa,Taiwan, Mumbai and India have either banned it or discouraged its use by raising taxes. And on March 27, 2007, San Francisco became the first city in the USA to ban it from large grocery stores.

    More people are ditching plastic bags on a local and national level with good reason: we produce about 500 billion plastic bags world-wide, and less than one percent of that is recycled.

    A recent QUEST report shows that plastic bottles are straining our environment, too: each year the USA alone produces 50 billion plastic bottles. Some would say to switch from plastic to paper bags - but reports show that paper bags aren’t the most sustainable solution.

    Plastic can have a longer shelf-live than humans do: it can persist in the environment for anywhere between 20 to 1,000 years. But a 16-year-old from Waterloo, Canada figured out to decompose it in only six weeks.

    Daniel Burd, a student at Waterloo Collegiate Institute, discovered the key to decomposing plastic bags for a school science fair. Needless to say, he won.

    “Almost every week I have to do chores and when I open the closet door, I have this avalanche of plastic bags falling on top of me,” said Burd to The Record, a Waterloo newspaper. “One day, I got tired of it and wanted to know what other people are doing with these plastic bags.”

    First, Burd decided to isolate the microbes that break down plastic in polyethelene plastic bags. Burd ground plastic bags into powder and created a solution to break it down using tap water and yeast. Six weeks later, he found that the plastic weighed 17 percent less than the control group.

    Burd then isolated the effective strains that caused the degradation - Sphingomonas and Pseudomonas - and tried the experiment again, adding sodium acecate.

    Six weeks later - as opposed to 1,000 years - the plastic decomposed by 43 percent.

    For his final report, Plastic Not Fantastic, Burd wrote that his process of polyethylene degradation can be used for large-scale plastic bag biodegradation.

    “As a result, this would save the lives of millions of wildlife species and save space in landfills,” wrote Burd.


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